How long did Hitler's wife live?
Hitler lived from 1889-1945 when he shot himself in the right temple with a war gun. Hitler lived 56 years.
The destructiveness of the two world wars caused many thoughtful Europeans to consider the need for some additional form of European Unity. National feeling was still too powerful, however, for European nations to give up their political sovereignity. As a result, the desire for unity focused cheifly on the economic arena, not the political one.
What happened before the Holocaust?
Well the Nazi's, led by Adolf Hitler, made the Jews not be able to own their own land. Then made the children of the Jews unabled to go to school. And he also made Jews infertal so they wouldn't be abled to reproduce more Jews.
The nickname of this World War II weapon was "Dicke Berta" in German "Fat Berta," or as Allied soldiers soon came to know it "Big Bertha."
Technically, it actually was a mortar, not a cannon.
What is the Buddhism symbol called?
Three... Three people.
Cop: Ma'am?
Three people dead...
Cop: Ma'am are you okay?!
I...Killed...Them........................................................................................................................
Their was hundreds of concentration camps and Jews wasn't sent to them from just Poland and Germany, slovakia, hungary, french and Austrian Jews was sent to them
but i give you a example
from Berlin to Auschwitz consecration camp is 490km - prime example
longest train ride during the holocaust was from France natzweiker to Latvia kieserwald is 1119 miles
but the people sent by trains do not all arrive in same destonation, some Jews and other sub humans are sent to other concentration camps along the way.
so time and speed varies on route,some could take several hours but some take a day or 2
Is cyanide poisoning a painful death?
Only professional cyanide eaters
LOL I have to laugh...
That is funny but as someone curious for his own reasons.
I think what was meant was probably.
Is cyanide poisoning a painful way to die and do you suffer terrible discomfort and pain?
I've just learned that it's quick.
A teaspoon in a glass of orange squash will cause loss of consciousness within anything up to about 20 seconds but death can take up to a minute or so.
Considerable discomfort yes.
Pain? It bothers me to say I just don't know.
How do you human rights affect military deployment?
Depends, but in Hitler's case, no one could speak out against them or the military would be ordered to kill that person. HUMAN RIGHTS No. 1 Broken
If you were a Jew, you were taken to concentration/ extermination camps where they killed you. HUMAN RIGHTS No. 2 Broken
What was Nuremberg trying to accomplish?
There were many purposes for the Nuremberg Trials.
Place blame where it could be placed.
To understand the causes of the war and the atrocities to prevent re-occurrence.
To achieve a sense of revenge against those seen as cause the death and destruction.
To investigate the accused atrocities and provide a fair trial.
Why did people let Hitler take his plan to exterminate the Jews so far?
People didn't want to realize that he was doing it. Some people still don't believe it today.
AnswerHitler had a way of "brain washing" people he was able to make people believe anything by three ways: Discipline, community, and action. Discipline was to make everyone equal by having everyone function in the same way as others such as standing or talking. People had to address others by repeating their name and answering in short responses. Community was involved by recruting people and developing mottos for their group such as a sign and slogan like "Heil Hitler." Action was involved by forcing people to believe and showing others their way. The best example of this notion is to watch a movie called The Wave. It's an 80's film which shows how the people deny certain things. AnswerHitler put many groups together. He had all the Germans believing that he was doing the right thing. Nobody would rebel against Hitler because there was too many that went along with Hilter. He was overpowering anybody he wanted to. He killed children and babies. Then, before he got caught, he killed himself. That was probably the nicest thing he ever did. AnswerWhat the people before me said is true, but also we had our own problems going on in America. We started fearing that the Japanese were going to overtake our country when they bombed us at Pearl Harbor, so we started putting them in camps, though they weren't like the camps during the haulocost, we were still basically focusing on America's health. It wasn't till later that we realized that we needed to help there to get rid of Japan. Anywho. Also, the Germans were swayed by Hitler.. It's not like he had mind control, but he was such an influential speaker that they fell in line after his cause thinking by doing this it would make the Germans the more superior race. AnswerWhat you are asking makes a decent point. Germany hadn't done anything to the US for example, so we didn't bother them. But when the started conquering Europe, that's when European countries and their Allies got involved. I know that the United States was just coming out of a recession and was reluctant to get into another war after still recovering from World War I. To go with the first answer. That is true. People deny things in history such as the Holocaust.
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The question makes the assumption that it would have been easy to 'do something' about the killings. A roar of condemnation from both Houses of Congress wouldn't have been enough. Moreover, the routine, systematic killing of the Jews started in 1941 and reliable information reached the US only around the time of the bombing of Pearl Harbior.
How many British soldiers died during the battle of Ypres?
70,000 soldiers died during the Third Battle
How did countries pay for World War 2?
I dont know about other countries but the U.S. payed through mostly war bonds which were temerary loans given to the government by citizens which were to be repaid after the war
What did the nazis promise Germany?
They promised that they would restore Germany's 'honour' and to its previous prosperity before WW1, that they would abolish the treaty and get rid of the failed Weimar Republic:
Key promises included:
Value of an all original arisaka type 99?
Not much....there are tons of them in the US. But it is a nice, solid rifle to shoot if you can find ammo.
If it's in good shape and has the monopod, bolt cover, leather strap and bayonette then it's worth around $325
If it still has the flower emblem on the top of the barrel then $400.
If it has an original optical scope then much more.
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There are some that are worth upwards of a thousand bucks or more. There are not many left in USA. Many have been chopped and sporterized and scrapped.
Finding one such as a type 99 early manufacture with the Emperor's Crest intact and 70% or better original blue and original stock in original military configuration with clear markings and proofs and fair to decent wood with the dust cover over the bolt, and the fold-out "wings" to the rear sight intact (for shooting at aircraft) is really difficult now...especially with the original bolt still in the gun, and bright bore. In fact it is getting nearly impossible to find them like that. The early manufactured ones were excellent steel, excellent machining, and withstood test pressures to explosive destruction that went beyond the Mauser K98!
Sources of parts are drying up. There are little bits here and there. After 1945, no government really used these rifles. Not like the K98, which was used right up into the 1980's in some parts of the world. Sources for 6.5 Jap and 7.7 Jap ammo are getting slim as well. Very expensive for new manufacture. Surplus is pretty well shot out and gone. Boxer-type brass casings for reloading are available, but expensive.
Many Japanese soldiers discarded the dustcovers as too noisy. Many of these rifles left the factory without the fold-out "wings" on the rear sights. Much of the ammunition that was once available and frequently fired in these rifles was very corrosive to barrels and actions. The vast majority of these rifles saw much hard use. Both MacArthur and elements of the Jap high command ordered the crests ground off these rifles in connection with some surrender agreements.
I scored onethat is absolutely perfect on a stroke of luck - except that some fool took a saw to the stock to make a deer gun out of it. It took me several years to find an original stock for it. I put this one up for my Son or Grand-kid to inherit some day.
When I was a youngster, I can remember the local hardware / discount store had new trash cans that were crammed full of type 99 Arisaka rifles, 88 commission rifles, Siamese mausers, 98 mausers, Carcanos, Steyr-Manlichers, and you could have anyone you wanted from $16.00 to $30.00 depending on the rifle. The majority were hard suplus even then. Either rusted dark brown, or sticky with grease that may have been cosmoline. There was very cheap ammo there in little tan cardboard boxes and wrapped in paper with string tied around it. People bought them and hunted with them, and then sold them. No one was really collecting them like now. The vast majority were sawed up into Frankenstein-like experimental deer rifles, and that was a cryin' shame.
What were the most important events between 1960 and the present?
Vieitnam warMartin Luther King, Jr. "I have a dream" speech+ assaination.
How did the Nazi Germany use concentration camps to carry out genocide?
In the late 1930's the Nazis killed thousands of handicapped Germans by lethal injection and poisonous gas. After the German invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941, mobile killing units following in the wake of the German Army began shooting massive numbers of Jews and Roma (Gypsies) in open fields and ravines on the outskirts of conquered cities and towns. Eventually the Nazis created a more secluded and organized method of killing enormous numbers of civilians -- six extermination centers were established in occupied Poland where large-scale murder by gas and body disposal by cremation were systematically conducted. Victims were deported to these centers from Western Europe and from the ghettos in Eastern Europe which the Nazis had established. In addition, millions died in the ghettos and concentration camps as a result of forced labor, starvation, exposure, brutality, disease and execution.
What was adolf Hitler's punishments after the Holocaust?
Hitler committed suicide at the last days of the war in europe.
See: http://www.germanculture.com.ua/library/facts/bl_religion.htm "Prior to World War II, about two-thirds of the German population was Protestant and the remainder Roman Catholic. Bavaria was a Roman Catholic stronghold. Roman Catholics were also well represented in the populations of Baden-Württemberg, the Saarland, and in much of the Rhineland. Elsewhere in Germany, especially in the north and northeast, Protestants were in the majority. During the Hitler regime, except for individual acts of resistance, the established churches were unable or unwilling to mount a serious challenge to the supremacy of the state. A Nazi, Ludwig Müller, was installed as the Lutheran bishop in Berlin. Although raised a Roman Catholic, Hitler respected only the power and organization of the Roman Catholic Church, not its tenets. In July 1933, shortly after coming to power, the Nazis scored their first diplomatic success by concluding a concordat with the Vatican, regulating church-state relations. In return for keeping the right to maintain denominational schools nationwide, the Vatican assured the Nazis that Roman Catholic clergy would refrain from political activity, that the government would have a say in the choice of bishops, and that changes in diocesan boundaries would be subject to government approval. However, the Nazis soon violated the concordat's terms, and by the late 1930s almost all denominational schools had been abolished. Toward the end of 1933, an opposition group under the leadership of Lutheran pastors Martin Niemöller and Dietrich Bonhoeffer formed the "Confessing Church." The members of this church opposed the takeover of the Lutheran Church by the Nazis. Many of its members were eventually arrested, and some were executed--among them, Bonhoeffer--by the end of World War II."
Germany has a population of 82,400,996. Out of this 0.119% are Hindus. The population of Hindu in Germany is 98,057. Out of these followers of Hinduism, 45,000 are Tamil, 8,000 are from Afghanistan, 7,500 are white, and the rest are Indian and others.